Appearance: Saturday Morning on Radio New Zealand
Talking with Kim Hill on RNZ from my narrowboat in the UK.
We touched on controversial emojis, exploding head horses, and having the longest introduction to any interview I’ve ever had.
Talking with Kim Hill on RNZ from my narrowboat in the UK.
We touched on controversial emojis, exploding head horses, and having the longest introduction to any interview I’ve ever had.
This was a fun one, recording with Alie Ward in Los Angeles, covering all kinds of interesting circumstances that came up in my time running Emojipedia.
oh and as we recorded in person, Gremmie (🐶) did an excellent job producing / being fluffy.
It’s a two-part episode, and also features Jennifer Daniel (head of emoji at Google) and Keith Broni (editor in chief at Emojipedia) released in time for World Emoji Day. Enjoy!
A few clips can be found below.
Thanks to Alie for having me on, and all the dedicated Ologies listeners who got in touch after this was published.
I was on this week’s episode of Clockwise (“four tech topics, 30 minutes”) with Dan Moren, Mikah Sargent, and Abrar Al-Heeti. Here’s the rundown:
Whether we’d be comfortable in a driverless taxi, our thoughts on the U.S. Surgeon General’s advisory regarding kids and social media, using Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro on the iPad, and the last time technology blew us away.
For me, the last piece of technology that blew me away was the “Bold Glamour” filter on TikTok. It’s not that we haven’t had beauty filters improving over time, it’s just that seeing these next-level filters working in real time is something that is hard to describe.
…oh and a bonus topic from Mikah broke how my brain works:
With Lisa Leong on my sometimes-local station, ostensibly there to discuss the coronation and their PR team’s emoji attempt.
But we also covered some other fun stuff like when one of the police forces in the UK reached out to help decipher an intercepted message.
There’s an ongoing narrative of “Gen Z vs Millenials” that seems to have taken over the discourse in early 2021. Some is just reframing any trend to fit a combative story, others may hold some weight.
A common theme of this on TikTok and elsewhere has been that the laughing crying emoji is outdated. Somehow it’s an emoji I’ve now reported on for half a decade and everyone’s love/hate relationship with it.
Anyway, here’s me on Breakfast Television in Toronto discussing this and more.
I feel very fortunate to have this life 💕
Photos: November 2020 issue of Waterways World
New emojis have been announced with a likely 2021 release. That’s before most people have the 2020 emojis, but such is the change to the schedule.
I went on The Morning Show to talk about it (the Australian TV show from Sydney, not the drama series on Apple TV+), and did an emoji quiz that I usually perform terribly at, but did surprisingly well for a change!
Incidentally, this is the first TV cross I’ve done from the boat. Plenty of radio has taken place, but TV I usually prefer wait til I can go in-studio to save any lag, but 2020 and all…
Every year, the chant gets louder:
oh that’s cool Apple that you added all this stuff but WHERE IS MY EMOJI SEARCH
This year, people are going to have to come up with a new request, because emoji search is coming to iOS 14.
Emoji search seems so obvious, did Apple just forget to implement it? Did they not know people wanted this?
Here I piece together the most likely reasons this took so long. It’s probably not just one, but a bit of each of them.
(Oh, and if you’re new to my rarely-update-blog here, you can usually find me over at Emojipedia.)
The emoji keyboard first came to the iPhone twelve years ago in iPhone OS 2.2.
It took until 2011 for widespread access to this keyboard in iOS, and wasn’t until 2016 that it became clear that frequent emoji updates may be a real thing.
In the early years, there wasn’t much change in the emoji set. iOS 8.3 in 2015 nearly doubled the set, and by the following year it was clear that updates were coming consistently year-on-year.
This isn’t much of an excuse so much as to reframe our minds. It feels like emojis have been huge and growing in number forever but we’re talking more likely 4-5 years here.
Search isn’t Apple’s forte. Siri and App Store search come to mind as examples that you just don’t have faith when you say or type a phrase, that you’ll get a great result.
You might, but you wouldn’t want to bet your life on it.
It seems reasonable that Apple knows its strengths, and has avoided doing emoji search until it could do a decent job.
Apple has emoji search on the Mac. It’s existed for years. And it has gotten worse over time.
Something happened in 2016 which caused the previously inflexible-yet-consistent emoji search to broaden and accept more terms, but with far less pleasing results.
The good news? Emoji search in macOS Big Sur has improved. It’s also decent in iOS 14 beta.
It felt like in 2016-2019, Apple’s macOS emoji search was either too complex and buggy to fix, and now replaced. Or it has finally been improved.
Whether these tweaks are implemented by hand (by checking the most common search phrases and fixing accordingly), or by natural language processing improvements, I’m not sure.
Apple has had emoji auto-suggest for a number of years on iOS.
You start typing a word, and an emoji might be suggested in the list of options. This works relatively well for a small set of results.
Issues with auto-suggest-as-emoji-search:
Was emoji auto-suggest intended as the solution, so emoji search wasn’t needed at all? Did this delay the search feature? Maybe, but not necessarily.
Perhaps it was just a good place to get some data on what people are emoji searching for.
The first version of emoji auto-suggest on iOS only suggested one emoji. Damon Beres at Mashable noted the issue this presented, when searching for some terms.
Why should CEO show a man and not a woman?
Having only one auto-suggest option was always short-sighted, as it’s lose-lose no matter which gender is shown.
Apple rectified this in a subsequent release, by showing up to three choices.
Given the public and media interest in emoji, I doubt Apple wanted to roll out emoji search on iOS that was either buggy (ala Mac emoji search until now) or suggested bias (like the CEO auto-suggest option used to).
It’s one thing having bad search results on a relatively hidden feature on the Mac. It’s another to have them on a marquee feature of iOS.
Thankfully the emoji search results on iOS 14 beta are decent. Though they don’t make a particular point of which gender is shown first - it varies considerably, with no specific logic that is clear.
One failing here: you cannot press-and-hold any search result emoji to choose a different skin tone. The same limitation applies to the emoji auto-suggest feature.
One minor issue that may have deterred Apple from implementing emoji search earlier: it’s sometimes weird having a keyboard shown on screen that doesn’t actually type into your app.
If you accidentally find your way into the emoji search field, there is a new button in the lower-right hand corner to escape back to regular text entry. Or just tap where you want to type.
This same issue exists with third-party keyboards and iMessage apps like any GIF search. It seemed weirder at first, but now I think most users are familiar with a search-within-keyboard option.
As far as I can tell, there is no option to turn the emoji bar off.
This is beta software, so I’m not going to review the specific functionality, but my initial notes are:
Are you running iOS 14 beta and have you noticed any major emoji search issues? I’d be interested to know.
As far as I can tell, what Apple has implemented so far with iOS emoji search passes the ‘good enough to not notice anything special going on’ test.
In January 2020 I visited the TWiT studio (This Week in Tech) to join Mikah Sargent and Jason Howell on Tech News Weekly.
Here’s a couple of photos of me on set, and the show as it went out. If you’d like to watch, here is the episode.